Machine Generated Data
Tags
Color Analysis
Face analysis
Amazon

AWS Rekognition
Age | 28-44 |
Gender | Male, 71.5% |
Calm | 52.5% |
Happy | 34.5% |
Angry | 12.3% |
Sad | 0.6% |
Fear | 0% |
Disgusted | 0% |
Confused | 0% |
Surprised | 0% |
Feature analysis
Amazon
Clarifai

AWS Rekognition
Bird | 65.8% | |
Categories
Imagga
created on 2021-04-04
text visuals | 98.5% | |
paintings art | 1.4% | |
Captions
Microsoft
created by unknown on 2021-04-04
text, letter | 100% | |
Salesforce
Created by general-english-image-caption-blip on 2025-05-16
a photograph of a couple of envelopes with a pink ribbon tied to a postcard
OpenAI GPT
Created by gpt-4 on 2025-02-13
The image shows two envelopes displayed against a grey background. Both envelopes appear to be addressed in a similar handwritten style. The top envelope is addressed to "Mr. William Copely, 246 W. 80th St., N.Y.C., N.Y. 10024" from "H.C. Westermann, Brookfield Center, Conn. 06805". It has a yellow 5 cent postage stamp featuring the National Park Service with a date stamp marked "SEP 15 PM 1958."
The bottom envelope is similarly addressed to the same recipient and sender, but it has a distinct pink ribbon tied around it in a bow, giving it a personal touch. This envelope also contains an image of former President Franklin D. Roosevelt on its purple 5-cent postage stamp, and the date stamp is marked "2 PM MAR 7 1969."
Both envelopes contain additional handwritten notations, such as "THE LETTER EDGED IN BLACK PRESS Inc.", suggesting a possible designation or organization name related to the content or sender.
Created by gpt-4o-2024-05-13 on 2025-02-13
The image shows two distinct envelopes addressed to the same recipient, "Mr. William Copley" or "Mr. Bill Copley" at "246 W. 80th St., N.Y.C., N.Y. 10024". Both envelopes have a hand-written address, and they were sent by H.C. Westermann from Brookfield Center, Connecticut.
The first envelope is clean and neatly addressed, and it is dated with a postmark from Newtown, dated April 7, 1965, at 7 PM. It has a yellow and green postage stamp worth 5 cents that is related to the National Park Service, 1916-1966.
The second envelope appears to be more distressed, with abrasions and slight damage visible. It is wrapped with a pink ribbon tied into a bow. This envelope has a postmark from Brookfield, dated March 24, 1965. The postage stamp on this envelope features a portrait of Eleanor Roosevelt and it is also worth 5 cents. The ZIP code "10024" is highlighted with a thick black marker.
Both envelopes feature the consistent handwriting style of the sender, H.C. Westermann. The second envelope has a more informal touch with the use of "Bill" instead of "William" and the pink ribbon, which adds a decorative element.
Anthropic Claude
Created by claude-3-haiku-20240307 on 2025-02-13
The image shows two envelopes addressed to Mr. William Copley at an address in New York City. The envelopes appear to be from the H.C. Westerman Center in Brookfield, Connecticut. One of the envelopes has a National Park Service stamp, while the other has a stamp featuring President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The envelopes are tied together with a pink ribbon.
Created by claude-3-opus-20240229 on 2025-02-13
The image shows two handwritten envelopes addressed to Mr. William Copley at an address in New York City. The envelopes have various postmarks and stamps, including a vintage U.S. postage stamp featuring a black and yellow triangular logo. One envelope has a red ribbon tied around it. The handwriting on the envelopes appears to be from the same person, H.C. Westermann from Brookfield Center, Connecticut.
Created by claude-3-5-sonnet-20241022 on 2025-02-13
These are two similar envelopes addressed to Mr. William Copley at "The Letter Edged in Black Press" at 246 W. 80th St. in New York City, NY 10024. Both are sent from H.C. Westermann at Brookfield Center, Connecticut 06805.
The top envelope has a yellow 5¢ National Park Service stamp (1916-1966) while the bottom envelope has a purple 5¢ Roosevelt stamp. The bottom envelope also has a pink ribbon or bow tied around it. Both appear to be from 1966 based on the visible postmarks.
The handwriting appears to be the same on both envelopes, written in a casual but legible style. The bottom envelope has some black marks or stamps around the ZIP code number.
Created by us.anthropic.claude-3-5-sonnet-20241022-v2:0 on 2025-06-24
These are two envelopes addressed to the same location in New York City - specifically to "The Letter Edged in Black Press Inc." at 246 W. 80th St., NYC, NY 10024. Both envelopes are from H.C. Westermann at Brookfield Center, Connecticut. The top envelope has a yellow 5-cent National Park Service stamp (1916-1966), while the bottom envelope has a purple 5-cent stamp and is decorated with a pink ribbon. Both appear to be from 1966 based on the visible postmarks. The handwriting is similar on both envelopes, suggesting they were written by the same person.
Meta Llama
Created by us.meta.llama3-2-11b-instruct-v1:0 on 2025-03-15
The image shows two envelopes with handwritten addresses and stamps.
The top envelope is addressed to Mr. William Copley at the H.C. Westermann Brookfield Center in Connecticut. It has a yellow stamp in the upper right corner that says "National Park Service 1916-1986" and features a green triangle logo. The envelope is postmarked from New York City on April 7, 1969, at 7 PM.
The bottom envelope is addressed to the same recipient, Mr. William Copley, at the H.C. Westermann Brookfield Center in Connecticut. It has a purple stamp in the upper right corner that features a portrait of President Roosevelt and says "5c POSTAGE." The envelope is postmarked from Bridgeport, Connecticut, on March 24, 1969, at 4 PM.
Both envelopes are white and have handwritten addresses and postmarks. They appear to be from the same sender and are likely related to each other.
Created by us.meta.llama3-2-90b-instruct-v1:0 on 2025-03-15
The image features two white envelopes, each with handwritten addresses and stamps. The top envelope is addressed to Mr. William Copley at "THE LETTER EDGED IN BLACK PRESS" in New York City, while the bottom envelope is addressed to the same recipient but includes a pink ribbon tied around it. Both envelopes have a yellow National Park Service stamp in the upper-right corner, indicating they were sent in 1968. The envelopes are set against a gray background, suggesting they may be part of an archival collection or exhibit.
Amazon Nova
Created by amazon.nova-lite-v1:0 on 2025-02-13
Two envelopes are displayed on a gray background. The envelopes are white and have black writing on them. The first envelope has a yellow stamp with the words "National Park Service" and "U.S." written on it. The second envelope has a purple stamp with the words "Eleanor Roosevelt" and "5 U.S. Postage" written on it. Both envelopes have a pink ribbon tied around them.
Created by amazon.nova-pro-v1:0 on 2025-02-13
The image shows two envelopes. The top one is white, with a yellow stamp on the top right. The address is written in black ink. The bottom envelope is also white, with a pink ribbon tied around it. It has a purple stamp with the image of a person and the text "Eleanor Roosevelt" written on it. The address is written in black ink. Both envelopes have a black ink stamp on the bottom right.
Google Gemini
Created by gemini-2.0-flash on 2025-05-11
Here's a description of the image:
The image displays two envelopes.
The top envelope features the following details written in black: "H.C. Westermann, Brookfield Center, Conn., 06805," as the return address. The destination address reads: "Mr. William Copley, % The Letter Edged in Black Press, 246 W. 80th St., N.Y.C., N.Y. 10024." It has a postmark indicating "SUEPORT - PM 7 APR 1968," along with a yellow stamp depicting "National Park Service 1916-1966," valued at "5 U.S."
The bottom envelope contains similar information. The return address is "H.C. Westermann, Brookfield Center, Conn., 06805" with an anchor drawn with the address. The destination address reads: "B'll Copley, THE LETTER EDGED IN BLACK PRESS Inc, 24 W. 80th St., N.Y.?, N.Y. 10024" and is circled. A pink ribbon is tied around the envelope. There's a postmark reading "BRIDGEPORT PM 24 MAR 1968" and a purple stamp showing Eleanor Roosevelt, valued at "5 U.S. POSTAGE."
Created by gemini-2.0-flash-lite on 2025-05-11
The image is a photograph of two envelopes. The top envelope is addressed to "Mr. William Copley / THE LETTER EDGED IN BLACK PRESS / 246 W. 80th St. / N.Y.C., N.Y. 10024". It is postmarked "SUEPORT PM 7 APR 1968" and has a "National Park Service 1916-1966" stamp. The return address is "H.C. Westermann / Brookfield Center, Conn. 06805".
The bottom envelope, which is tied with a pink ribbon, is also addressed to "Mr. Roll Copley / THE LETTER EDGED IN BLACK PRESS Inc. / 24- 80th St. / N.Y.?, N.Y. 10024". It is postmarked "BRIDGEPORT PM 24 MAR 1968" and has a "ELEANOR ROOSEVELT 5 U.S. POSTAGE" stamp. The return address is similar, "H.C. Westermann / Brookfield Center, Conn. 06805".
Mistral Pixtral
Created by us.mistral.pixtral-large-2502-v1:0 on 2025-06-08
The image shows two envelopes addressed to Mr. William Copley of The Letter Edged in Black Press Inc. at 246 W. 80th St., New York, NY 10024. Both envelopes are handwritten and appear to be sent from H.C. Westermann in Brookfield Center, Connecticut, 06805.
Top Envelope:
- The envelope has a yellow National Park Service stamp in the top right corner, indicating a postage value of 5 cents.
- The postmark is from August 7, 1969.
- The sender's address is written in the top left corner, and the recipient's address is in the center.
Bottom Envelope:
- This envelope features a purple stamp with a portrait of Franklin D. Roosevelt, also indicating a postage value of 5 cents.
- The postmark is also from August 7, 1969.
- The sender's address is again written in the top left corner, and the recipient's address is in the center.
- The envelope is tied with a pink ribbon and has a black anchor symbol drawn on it.
Both envelopes have the same sender and recipient information, suggesting they were sent together or around the same time. The handwriting and additional drawings add a personal touch to the correspondence.